PODCAST · society
Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark
by Inception Point Ai
Check out Vanessa Clark's Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/vane... This is your Corn Commidity Tracker podcast. For more info go to https://www.instagram.com/vane...https://www.quietplease.ai Or check out these deals https://amzn.to/3FkjUmwThis show includes AI-generated content.
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Vanessa Clark Unpacks May Gains and December's 8-Cent Carry as Global Demand Lifts Corn Futures
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on corn futures, cash bids, and what's driving the market right now.First up, the most current futures prices from Nexus Cooperative and market reports. The front-month May 2026 corn contract is sitting at four dollars and sixty-eight cents per bushel, up nicely from recent sessions. July 2026 is at four dollars and eighty cents, September at four dollars and eighty-five cents, and the key December 2026 contract is at four dollars and ninety-nine cents. These reflect steady climbs, with Friday's close showing gains of one and a quarter to five and a half cents across the board, rounding out a strong week—May up thirteen cents and December up fourteen and a half cents according to DTN and Barchart data. Helena Agri notes July rounded to four dollars eighty, September four eighty-five, and December four ninety-nine, confirming the upward grind despite bearish supply talk from Brazil and Argentina harvests.Cash bids are softer in spots, like Agtegra in North Dakota showing May 2026 around three dollars sixty-three cents for number two yellow corn, but producers hit their sales target at four dollars seventy-five for the last of the 2025 crop. Globally, European corn prices are rising on higher freight and fertilizer costs, per Hellenic Shipping News, and the World Bank forecasts a three point eight percent corn price surge in 2026 amid Middle East supply disruptions.Technicals look impressive with steady advances since summer lows, even as crude falls. Weekly changes show corn up seven and three-quarters for May twenty-six and fourteen and a half for December twenty-six. Actionable tip: If you're holding new crop, watch that December contract for carry—it's pricing eight cents lower into March per DTN. Basis is flat to lower, so lock in if your costs align.That's your corn update—prices firming amid global pressures. Thanks for tuning in, friends—subscribe, share, and catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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May Kicks Off with Export Surge and Planting Push Across the Corn Belt
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the freshest corn market updates as we kick off May.Right now, corn futures are showing some early softness. The May 2026 contract settled yesterday at 464.75 cents per bushel according to USDA reports, down a bit from recent highs, with front-month trading dipping 1 to 2 cents at the open per AgMarket.Net's early morning analysis. July corn closed at 474.75 cents, while December is hovering around 489.50, still testing that key 5-dollar resistance but facing profit-taking after overnight peaks. Cash prices are steady too, with the national average at about 4.32 dollars and a quarter, and Central Illinois country elevators averaging 4.45 bucks.What's driving this? USDA's latest export sales report showed a strong 1.598 million metric tons of old-crop corn booked for the week ending April 23rd, the biggest since late February. That's bullish amid tight supply-demand balance, as analysts like Bryan Doherty note prices staying in that 4-to-5 dollar range despite big crops and global demand offsetting each other. Planting is ramping up fast across the Corn Belt with good weather ahead, but over half the crop is still to go in. Watch weekly exports out today, estimated at 1 to 2.5 million tons, and keep an eye on crude oil over 106 bucks a barrel, which ties into ethanol blends as Mexico eyes bumping theirs to 10 percent.For farmers, this mixed lower trade means locking in prices now while they're solid, especially with resistance firming up. Stay tuned to those support levels at 4.57 for May and 4.86 for December.That's your Daily Corn Price Tracker wrap-up. Thanks for joining me, friends, grab those actionable insights, subscribe, and tune in next time for more corn market moves!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Corn Futures Hit Year-High as Funds Go Long and Export Sales Loom Large
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with your host Vanessa Clark. Today we're diving into the freshest corn market updates, straight from the latest reports to keep you in the know on prices, trends, and what it all means for your trades.First up, the current trading prices as of this morning. May 2026 corn futures closed at $4.65 and a quarter per bushel yesterday, up four and a half cents, and they're ticking up another cent or so in early trade. July futures settled at $4.75 and a half, up six and a quarter cents, while December hit $4.95 and three quarters, also gaining six and a quarter cents. Nearby cash corn averaged $4.32 and a quarter, jumping seven cents. These numbers come from Barchart and USDA futures settlements, showing steady gains spilling over from wheat support.News is buzzing with bullish signals. Corn futures just smashed a one-year high, fueled by strong export demand and weather worries, according to Investing.com. Funds are piling into net-long positions at over 551,000 contracts, echoing mid-2020 vibes ahead of a potential rally, as DTN Progressive Farmer reports. US planting is ahead at 25% complete, six points faster than the five-year average, with big states like Illinois and Indiana leading the pack.Globally, Mysteel notes national corn prices holding stable in a range-bound move amid unchanged supply and demand. In Europe, prices are climbing on freight and fertilizer costs, making US and Brazilian corn more competitive than Ukraine's. Brazil's safrinha crop faces dry spells in key southern states, per Advance Trading, which could tighten supplies later.Key takeaway: Watch tomorrow's weekly export sales, expected at 150,000 tonnes old crop and 100,000 new. With open interest rising and new contract highs in December corn, volatility might pick up into harvest.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, share, and catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Corn Climbs on Korean Buying and Fertilizer Fears as May Futures Pop to Four-Week Highs
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey there, I'm Vanessa Clark and welcome back to the Daily Corn Price Tracker. I'm so glad you're tuning in today because we've got some really exciting market movements to talk about in the corn space.Let's jump right into what's happening with corn prices. As of yesterday's close on Tuesday, May corn futures settled at four dollars and sixty-five and a quarter cents per bushel, up four and a half cents for the day. We're also seeing strong performance in the July contract, which hit a four-week high and is trading around four dollars and seventy-three and a quarter cents, up about four cents. December corn is holding near four dollars and ninety-three and a half cents, also up significantly.So what's driving these gains? Well, there's actually a perfect storm of bullish factors supporting the market right now. First, we're seeing strong global demand. South Korean importers just picked up sixty thousand metric tons of corn, and Taiwan has issued a tender for another sixty-five thousand metric tons. That's real buying interest that's supporting prices.We're also getting support from the wheat market, which has been rallying on poor crop conditions. That spillover effect is helping corn along as well. And here's something really important for you to pay attention to: fertilizer costs are running really high right now, and there's concern that some producers might actually limit their fertilizer applications this season. That could potentially impact yields down the road, and the market is pricing in that risk.On the weather front, the USDA reported that corn planting is at twenty-five percent complete, which is actually ahead of schedule and above the five-year average. Emergence is at seven percent, also ahead of where we typically are. But here's the thing to watch: there's excess moisture in parts of the corn belt that could complicate field conditions, and upcoming Midwest storms might slow planting progress in some areas.The national cash corn price is trading around four dollars and twenty-eight and a quarter cents, up nearly three cents from the previous day. If you're thinking about your marketing strategy, this is definitely a market worth paying attention to.That's what's happening in the corn market today. Thanks so much for listening to the Daily Corn Price Tracker, and don't forget to subscribe so you don't miss any of our updates. We'll be back tomorrow with the latest. See you then.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Corn Climbs Back: Rally Hits Four-Week High as Fertilizer Squeeze and Spec Money Fuel Futures Gains
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, this is Vanessa Clark with your Daily Corn Price Tracker. Thanks so much for tuning in. Let's dive right into what's happening in the corn market this week.We're seeing some really positive momentum building in corn futures right now. As of Monday, May corn futures closed at four dollars and sixty and three quarter cents per bushel, up five and three quarter cents for the day. July corn is making some new highs for the move, gaining five and three quarter cents to close at four dollars and sixty nine and one quarter cents. December corn added five and one quarter cents, settling at four dollars and eighty nine and one half cents per bushel.What's driving this rally? Several factors are at play. First, we're dealing with global supply risks tied to disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz, which is tightening global flows of nitrogen based fertilizers like ammonia and urea. That's lifting input costs and supporting prices. Second, planting pace concerns are providing support, along with strong demand tone. There's also uncertainty around Brazilian weather that's helping the bulls make their case.The money is flowing in our direction too. According to the Commitment of Traders report for the week ending April 21st, large money managers were net buyers of thirty thousand corn contracts. Spec funds added nearly twenty five thousand contracts back to their net long position, bringing their total net long to over one hundred eighty four thousand contracts.Here's something important to note. Corn futures recently hit a four week high, reaching four dollars and sixty one and a half cents per bushel, the highest level we've seen since March. Over the past four weeks, corn has gained one point one six percent.The market is working its way back toward March highs after losing about forty cents from those peaks. We're currently at the halfway point of that recovery, and whether we get all the way back remains to be seen. First notice day for May grain contracts is coming up on April 30th, so watch for any volatility around that date.Stay tuned for more updates, and thanks for listening to the Daily Corn Price Tracker. Be sure to subscribe so you don't miss tomorrow's market recap.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Crude Oil Lifts Corn as Europe Hits Six-Week High and El Niño Looms Large
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker. I'm your host Vanessa Clark, and boy do we have some interesting market movements to break down for you today.Let's jump right into what's happening with corn prices. Chicago Board of Trade corn futures rose on Monday as the crude oil market gained momentum, particularly as U.S.-Iran peace talks hit a snag. When energy prices move up, it tends to lift the agricultural markets along with them, and that's exactly what we're seeing play out right now.Looking at the technical side, corn prices are currently trading below the weekly pivot point at 1180.50, so traders are watching closely to see if we can reclaim that level. If you're looking to enter a position, the daily pivot sits at 1176.25, with another potential entry point above 1181.50 if we see strength in the market.Now here's where things get really interesting internationally. Over in Europe, June maize on the Matif exchange surged 7.25 euros per ton to 209.75, hitting its highest level in six weeks. European traders are getting increasingly concerned about supply pressures, and that's pushing prices higher over there.On the domestic front, we've got some weather news that's actually pretty positive. Drought conditions in the far western corn belt have eased thanks to recent rainfall, which is giving farmers some relief. Meanwhile, Argentina's corn harvest is tracking at 27 percent complete and is expected to deliver record production, though the USDA's forecast is running 7.5 million metric tons below what Brazil's CONAB is projecting.One thing to keep your eye on as we head into May is that El Niño has a 90 percent probability of developing for the rest of 2026, with a one-in-four chance of a very strong event by year-end. This could impact corn production in parts of Asia and the Americas, so it's definitely something to monitor.Thanks so much for tuning in to Daily Corn Price Tracker. Be sure to subscribe and join us next time for more market insights and price updates.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Corn Climbs a Penny as Export Sales Shine and Global Supply Forecast Tightens Before Planting Season
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on corn markets as of this Friday morning.July corn futures closed yesterday at four dollars and sixty-three and three-quarters cents per bushel, up just one cent on the day after a choppy session, according to Pro Farmer and Total Farm Marketing reports. That's after four straight days of gains, but big supply kept a lid on bigger rallies, even with wheat prices surging higher on drought worries. The national average cash corn price sat around four dollars and eighteen and three-quarters cents, dipping a half cent midday per Barchart.Export sales were a bright spot—USDA data showed one point three two million metric tons for the week ending April sixteenth, down a bit from last week but up three percent from the four-week average, with strong new crop buys to Mexico hitting four hundred forty thousand metric tons. Cumulative old crop commitments are now twenty-eight percent ahead of last year, beating USDA forecasts. Plus, South Korea snapped up one hundred thirty-four thousand metric tons privately. The International Grains Council trimmed its global corn production outlook to one point three billion tons, signaling tighter supplies ahead.Technically, bulls hold a slight edge with prices trending up from recent lows—watch resistance at four dollars seventy-five cents and support at four dollars forty-eight and a half. For cash marketers, aim to have sixty percent of your twenty twenty-five crop sold and thirty percent of twenty twenty-six.If you're pricing now, these levels offer solid opportunities before planting ramps up. Stay tuned for more updates—thanks for listening, subscribe and tune in next time!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Corn Climbs on Export Surge While Farmers Eye April Pricing Deadline
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with your host Vanessa Clark. Today we're diving into the freshest corn market updates from midweek trading, including the latest prices, export wins, and what it all means for you.As of Wednesday's close on the Chicago Board of Trade, May 2026 corn futures settled at $4.54 and a quarter per bushel, up just half a cent on the day after three straight positive sessions. July futures hit $4.62 and three-quarters, up three-quarters of a cent, while September reached around $4.67 with modest gains too. Cash corn averaged $4.18 and a quarter nationally, firming up a bit. These slight upticks came despite some soybean weakness dragging on the complex, but strong export demand kept things afloat.The big news? USDA flash sales totaling over 731,000 metric tons of U.S. corn this week, including big buys from Mexico spanning multiple years, 100,000 tons to Colombia, and more to unknown spots. That's on top of a fresh 130,000-ton sale announced Wednesday. Total U.S. corn commitments are roaring at 72.79 million metric tons, up 29 percent year-over-year, fueled by Latin America, Europe, and Asia. Export inspections hit 65.7 million bushels last week, led by Mexico, Japan, and Colombia. Even with Argentina's record harvest flooding the market, U.S. demand stays robust.A dip in ethanol production to 1.04 million barrels per day added mild pressure, but pending E15 year-round sales legislation could boost corn use long-term. Thursday's export sales report eyes 1 to 1.8 million tons for old crop—watch that for direction. Rain forecasts across U.S. fields might delay planting, but global trade routes hold steady amid geopolitics.Farmers, with first notice day nearing April 30, think pricing now versus rolling to July amid this volatility. Solid exports signal strength—consider locking in if you're holding bin corn.Thanks for tuning in, friends—subscribe, share, and catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Corn Climbs to Two-Week High as Wheat Strength Lifts Grain Complex and Planting Stays on Pace
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with your host Vanessa Clark. Today we're diving into the freshest corn market updates to keep you ahead of the curve on corn futures, cash bids, and what it all means for your trading and farming decisions.Let's start with the headline: As of the close on April 21st, May corn futures settled at four dollars and fifty-three and three-quarters cents per bushel, up one and three-quarters cents on the day. That's according to Brownfield Ag News and Barchart reports. July corn followed suit, climbing one and three-quarters cents to four dollars and sixty-two cents, hitting a two-week high as noted by Pro Farmer. This modest rally got a boost from strength in winter wheat markets and soybean gains, with traders eyeing HRW wheat for direction.On the planting front, USDA data shows U.S. corn plantings at eleven percent complete as of April 19th, right on pace with last year and two points ahead of the five-year average. Emergence is at four percent, also ahead of normal. Export sales picked up too, with one hundred thousand metric tons to Colombia and one hundred ninety-five thousand to unknown destinations for the 2025-26 crop.Cash markets are holding steady around four dollars to four dollars sixty cents in spots like Illinois Gateway FS bids, with averages like the national cash corn at four dollars eighteen and a half cents, up two and a quarter cents. Technically, corn's balancing between support at four dollars forty-eight and resistance at four dollars seventy-five, suggesting a potential bottom in place.For traders, keep an eye on overnight moves—July corn was slightly down a cent early this morning per Pro Farmer. If you're marketing, cash-only folks might aim to have sixty percent of your 2025 crop sold now.That's your daily corn scoop—stay informed, trade smart, and watch those wheat crossovers. Thanks for tuning in, friends—subscribe, share, and catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Corn Climbs Past $4.60 as Export Demand and Crude Oil Rally Fuel Midwest Optimism
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the freshest corn market news, straight from the latest reports as of April 20 and early Monday trading.Let's kick off with prices. May corn futures closed Friday at $4.52 per bushel, up three and a quarter cents, according to Brownfield Ag News. ADM Investor Services noted prices edged one to three cents higher in choppy trade, with July 26 corn facing resistance around $4.62 and a half. By Monday midday, Total Farm Marketing reported July CBOT corn trading at $4.60, up two and a half cents, while December futures hit $4.79 and a quarter, up two and a quarter cents. National average cash corn is hovering near $4.16 and a half, up nearly five cents, per Barchart data. Solid support here from rising crude oil prices amid Middle East tensions boosting ethanol demand.Export demand is firing on all cylinders. DeLong Company highlights weekly inspections near the high end of expectations, with year-to-date shipments over 30 percent ahead of last year—Mexico, Japan, and South Korea leading the pack at 1.669 million metric tons for the week ending April 16. That's a bullish signal keeping prices range-bound but firm.On the fundamentals, CFTC data shows managed money traders sold off 59,000 contracts, trimming their net long to 159,000. Cold storage stocks dipped half a percent year-over-year, slightly better than expected. Globally, EU grain exports are up 18 percent for the 2025-26 year, per SunSirs, which bodes well for corn demand and spot prices.Key takeaway: Watch resistance levels and export numbers closely—strong demand could push prices higher if weather or geopolitics cooperate. Farmers, consider locking in some sales if you're sitting on old crop.Thanks for tuning in to Daily Corn Price Tracker—subscribe, share with fellow growers, and catch you next time for more corn market moves!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Kernels and Cents: Illinois Corn Holds Steady in the Mid-Fours While Futures Play Wait and See
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa Clark, and today we're diving into the freshest updates on corn prices and what's shaking up the markets right now.Let's kick off with the numbers you all tune in for. According to the latest Gateway FS cash bids in Illinois, number two yellow corn is trading in a tight range across key locations. You've got spots like Evansville and Kempers hitting highs around four dollars fifty-nine cents per bushel, while Marion is closer to four dollars twenty-six cents. The April contracts are steady between four dollars twenty-eight and four dollars fifty-nine cents per bushel. Nationally, AgWrx reports the CmdtyView average cash corn price ticked up half a cent to about four dollars per bushel as of early this morning. CHS cash bids show yellow corn at four dollars twenty-one cents at Absolute Energy, and Barchart notes futures wrapping up last week with front months fractionally lower but later contracts like September twenty twenty-six edging up a cent or so.On the news front, grains including corn are in a correction phase per recent market analysis, shrugging off some export buzz but holding firm amid whipsaw volatility. No major breakouts like we've seen in cotton, but watch for export sales data this week that could nudge prices. Farmers, if you're holding inventory, these steady cash bids in the mid-fours look solid for locking in now, especially with planting season ramping up.Quick tip: Check local elevators daily for basis adjustments, as locations vary by a few cents. Stay ahead by blending new crop futures with your cash positions.That's your corn scoop for today, friends. Thanks for listening, hit subscribe, and tune in next time for more Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Talk soon!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Corn Dips on Wheat Fade as Midwest Rains Stall Planters and Argentina Boosts Supply
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on corn markets as of yesterday's close on April 16th.Corn futures took a slight dip across the board at the Chicago Board of Trade. The May 2026 contract closed down 2.5 cents at $4.4875 per bushel, according to DeLong Company's Grain Market Commentary. July futures fell 2.75 cents to $4.5775, as reported by Pro Farmer and Total Farm Marketing, while December settled just 1.5 cents lower at $4.765. Cash prices echoed this, with Iowa's state average at $4.12, down 3 cents per the USDA report, and the national average cash corn around $4.11 from Barchart.What drove the pullback? Early support from strong wheat buying faded as wheat prices eased off highs, per Total Farm Marketing. Heavy rains in the Corn Belt have eased some drought worries but disrupted planting, giving a bit of lift to new crop prices. Export sales for the week ending April 9 hit 1.401 million metric tons—right in line with expectations, led by Japan and South Korea, and running 29% ahead of last year, as USDA data shows. That's bullish for demand. Meanwhile, Argentina's crop estimates rose to 61 million metric tons by Buenos Aires Grains Exchange, adding global supply pressure. Ethanol production ticked up to 329 million gallons, using about 110 million bushels of corn—on pace for USDA targets.Looking ahead, watch for more rain forecasts, export updates, and wheat's influence. If you're holding corn, these levels near the 200-day moving average around $4.46 might offer support, per AgMarket.Net.That's your corn update—stay tuned to the markets, farmers and traders. Thanks for listening, subscribe for daily insights, and tune in next time!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Corn Rallies 8 Cents as May Futures Hit $4.51 and Export Demand Holds Strong
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the freshest corn market updates to keep you ahead of the curve on corn prices, futures, and key trends.Right now, the May 2026 corn futures contract is sitting at four dollars and fifty-one cents per bushel, according to Farm Progress and Barchart data, marking a solid rally of about eight and a quarter cents from yesterday's close. Front-month contracts like December 2025 are around four dollars and nineteen cents, down just a touch, while cash bids in key spots like St. Joseph and Kansas City are hovering between four dollars thirty-one and four dollars fifty-seven cents per bushel. Markets Insider pegs the spot corn price near four dollars fifty-six cents, reflecting steady demand.Corn futures rallied Wednesday across most contracts, with gains of four and three-quarters to eight and a quarter cents, as Barchart reports, pushing the national average cash price up to about four dollars fifteen cents. This comes after a mixed Tuesday, buoyed by USDA export sales to Mexico and unknown destinations totaling over four hundred thousand metric tons. Brazilian crop estimates from CONAB also ticked up slightly to one hundred thirty-nine point five seven million metric tons, easing some supply worries. US planting is at five percent, right on pace with averages in most states.Looking ahead, keep an eye on Thursday's export sales data—traders expect zero point eight to one point eight million metric tons for old crop. Weather in growing regions and the next USDA WASDE report could spark more moves, especially with grains showing calmer but bullish vibes despite some pullbacks.Whether you're a farmer hedging your crop or just tracking commodities, these levels suggest holding steady but watching exports closely. Stay tuned for tomorrow's update.Thanks for listening, friends—subscribe, share, and tune in next time for more on the Daily Corn Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Kernels and Contracts: May Corn Climbs 4 Cents as Export Numbers Pop and Planting Hits 5 Percent
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with your host Vanessa Clark. Today we're diving into the freshest corn market updates to keep you ahead of the curve on pricing, exports, and planting progress.First up, the numbers you're here for. As of this morning, May 2026 corn futures are trading at four dollars and forty-four cents and a quarter, up four cents from yesterday according to The Andersons Trade Group. July is at four dollars and fifty-four cents, up three cents, September at four dollars and fifty-seven cents and a half, up two cents, and December at four dollars and seventy-three cents, also up two cents. Nearby cash corn hit four dollars and five cents nationally per Barchart's CmdtyView index, climbing three cents. Local bids vary, like Kansas City yellow corn at four dollars forty-five to four dollars forty-eight cents from 680 KFEQ reports.Tuesday's session ended mixed, with front months gaining one and a half to two and three-quarters cents while later contracts dipped slightly, as noted by Barchart. USDA data shows strong private exports: three hundred sixteen thousand metric tons to Mexico across marketing years, plus one hundred twenty thousand tons to unknown spots. US planting is off to a solid five percent complete, two points ahead of last week but matching the five-year average pace, with most states on or above target except Iowa, Nebraska, and Minnesota.Internationally, Brazil's CONAB bumped their corn crop estimate up one point three million metric tons to one hundred thirty-nine point five seven million, thanks to hikes in both first and second crops. Peace hopes and falling crude oil are pressuring prices a bit, per Helena Agri, but wheat's rallying on weather worries.For farmers and traders, keep an eye on breakeven around five dollars with pre-war fertilizer, or five dollars twenty-five now, as Ohio's Country Journal points out. If you're marketing, those export sales signal demand strength.That's your daily corn rundown, friends. Stay tuned for more, subscribe so you never miss an update, and tune in next time. Thanks for listening!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Corn Prices Hold Steady as Brazil Crop Grows and Hormuz Tensions Loom for Midwest Farmers
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on corn prices, futures, and what it all means for you as we kick off the trading week on this Tuesday morning.First up, the numbers you're here for. May corn futures closed Friday at $4.40 and a quarter per bushel, down just three-quarters of a cent after some early pressure from soybean selling and fund liquidation. According to Total Farm Marketing's daily summary, July futures slipped a quarter cent to $4.51, with managed money trimming their net long positions to 248,000 contracts as of April 7th. Cash bids are holding steady around the $4.30 to $4.57 range regionally—Kansas City truck bids for yellow corn sat at $4.51 to $4.57 last checked by 680 KFEQ, while spots like Illinois from Green Plains hit $4.65 for April delivery. National average cash corn dipped a half cent to about $4.03, per Barchart.News-wise, USDA export inspections came in at 1.783 million metric tons for the week ending April 9th—right in line with estimates and 34 percent ahead of last year. But watch Brazil: upcoming CONAB estimates point to a bigger crop at 139.9 million metric tons for 25/26, thanks to higher yields. Planting's off to a slow start too—only 5 percent of US corn is in the ground, matching the five-year average pace from the latest Crop Progress report.Energy volatility is shaking things up, with higher fertilizer and diesel costs—farm diesel in the upper $3s—pushing some farmers toward soybeans over corn for 2026 planting. And big geopolitical news: after failed US-Iran talks, President Trump announced a Strait of Hormuz blockade starting Monday at 10 AM ET, which could spike fuel and fertilizer even more, potentially tightening global corn supply down the road.Your takeaway? Keep an eye on basis levels and lock in if you're sitting on old crop—prices feel range-bound short-term, but export demand and weather could spark a rally. Thanks for tuning in, friends—hit subscribe, share with your farming crew, and I'll catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Nebraska to Indiana: How Oil Shocks and Export Surges Are Moving Your Corn Markets This Week
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey there, I'm Vanessa Clark, and welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker. I'm so glad you're here because we've got some really interesting market activity to break down today.Let's jump right into what's happening with corn prices. According to the latest market data, May corn futures are trading at four dollars and forty-one cents per bushel. That's a pretty solid price point as we head into the spring planting season. Now, if you're looking at cash bids across different regions, you're seeing some nice variation depending on where you are. In Nebraska, you're looking at around four dollars and four to four dollars and twenty-four cents depending on delivery timing. Over in Illinois, prices are climbing higher at four dollars fifty-seven to four dollars seventy. And if you're in Indiana, you can expect four dollars fifty-nine to four dollars seventy-four per bushel.Here's what's really driving the market right now. We had some significant geopolitical developments over the weekend that spooked traders. The U.S. and Iran negotiations collapsed, which sent oil prices soaring past one hundred dollars per barrel. That matters to you because higher oil prices mean higher fertilizer costs, and that's going to impact planting decisions. Wheat prices actually jumped nearly two percent on this news, and corn followed suit with gains of around one point eight percent.On the supply side, the USDA just released their April report, and they're keeping U.S. corn ending stocks unchanged, which is interesting. However, world corn ending stocks ticked slightly higher, and that actually put some downward pressure on prices by the end of the trading day.One more thing worth watching: export activity has been really strong. We shipped nearly eighty million bushels of corn last week, which is the second largest total for the marketing year. Japan, Mexico, and South Korea are all major destinations right now.As we head into planting season, keep your eye on the weather and these geopolitical developments. Now's a great time to lock in your price targets before things get really busy.Thanks so much for tuning in to Daily Corn Price Tracker. Be sure to subscribe and join me tomorrow for the latest updates. I'll catch you next time.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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119
Corn Bounces Back as Oil Recovers and Argentina Adds Supply Pressure to May Futures
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to the Daily Corn Price Tracker with your host Vanessa Clark. Today we're diving into the latest on corn markets, straight from the CBOT and key reports that every farmer and trader needs to know.First up, the current trading price: May 2026 corn futures are sitting at 449.75 cents per bushel, up 2.5 cents from yesterday's close. That's after a tough Thursday where May corn dropped 3.25 cents to around 444 cents, and July corn fell 3 cents to 455 cents. The national average cash corn price is hovering at about 4.05 to 4.08 dollars per bushel, down a bit on the week but showing some early bounce today.What's driving this? Thursday's USDA WASDE report kept the US corn balance sheet unchanged, with carryout at 2.127 billion bushels and a record crop forecast at 17.02 billion bushels yielding 186.5 bushels per acre. Farm gate prices got a small bump to 4.15 dollars per bushel. Export sales were solid at 1.361 million metric tons for the week ending April 2, right in the middle of estimates, with Japan as the top buyer and a flash sale of 135,000 metric tons to South Korea. Globally, the Rosario Grain Exchange upped Argentina's corn crop outlook to 67 million metric tons, way above USDA's 52 million estimate, adding supply pressure.Geopolitics played a role too—a US-Iran ceasefire reopened the Strait of Hormuz, tanking crude oil 16.45 dollars and dragging grains down. But oil's rebounding today, giving corn a lift amid long liquidation and ample supply worries.Key takeaway for you: Watch upcoming export data and planting progress in the Corn Belt. If sales stay strong, we could see support; otherwise, pressure might build. Stay nimble out there.Thanks for tuning in to Daily Corn Price Tracker—subscribe, share with your network, and catch you next time for more corn market updates!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Crude Crashes and USDA Awaits: Why Yesterday's Five-Week Low Has Illinois Watching Supply Numbers
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey there, this is Vanessa Clark with the Daily Corn Price Tracker, and I'm so glad you're tuning in today. We've got some really important market movements to talk about, so stick with me.Yesterday was quite a day in the corn markets. May corn futures closed at four dollars and forty seven and a quarter cents per bushel, down one and three quarter cents. The cash corn price also declined, settling at four dollars and eight cents, down one and a half cents. July corn dropped two cents to close at four dollars and fifty eight cents.So what's driving these moves? Well, a major factor is the crude oil market, which has been absolutely tanking. We saw a significant ceasefire agreement between the United States and Iran that includes the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. This news sent crude oil prices plummeting more than fifteen percent on the session, with front month crude dropping over twenty dollars per barrel at one point. When energy prices fall this sharply, it creates downside pressure across all grain and oilseed markets, and corn definitely felt that impact.The corn market also hit a five week low early in the trading session yesterday before recovering slightly off those lows. Technically, we've broken through some key support levels on the charts, which traders are watching very closely right now.Now here's what you need to be watching today. The USDA is releasing its April supply and demand report, also known as the WASDE report, and it's coming out at eleven o'clock AM Central Time. Analysts are expecting only small changes from the March report, but there's a two hundred million bushel range in trade estimates for carryout, ranging from two point zero five billion bushels all the way to two point two six seven billion bushels. That's a pretty wide range, and it could definitely move the market.The big question traders are asking is how the USDA will incorporate the grain stocks data into the old crop balance sheet. We're also seeing speculators holding the most net long positions in corn since twenty twenty three, which could add some volatility.Keep your eyes on that USDA report today. It's going to be a market mover, and I'll be tracking all the action for you. Thanks so much for listening to the Daily Corn Price Tracker, and make sure you subscribe so you don't miss our next update.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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117
Corn Hits Four-Week Low as Midwest Planting Gains and Export Shipments Surge to Japan and Mexico
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on corn prices, fresh market moves, and what it all means for you.Right now, corn futures are trading around 448 US cents per bushel, hitting a four-week low as reported by Trading Economics yesterday. That's down from recent highs, with the May 2026 contract settling at about 449 cents per bushel after dropping 3 to 6 cents on Monday, according to DeLong Company grain commentary. The July contract closed at 460 cents, and we're seeing pressure from favorable planting progress in the Midwest, expected rainfall, and some easing worries over fertilizer supplies tied to Middle East tensions.Over the past four weeks, corn's up a modest 2.55 percent, but down 4.34 percent over the last year. Exports are a bright spot though—USDA data shows strong shipments last week, led by corn at nearly 79 million bushels to places like Japan, Mexico, and Colombia, with China jumping back into the U.S. market, per RFD News. That's pushing the marketing year total way ahead, up 36 percent from last year.Keep an eye on Thursday's USDA WASDE report—it could tweak supply and demand outlooks, especially with solid U.S. export demand. South American crops are looking bigger too, adding downward pressure.For farmers and traders, this dip might be a buying chance if you're watching that 450 cents support level. Stay nimble, track those exports, and hedge smart. Thanks for tuning in to Daily Corn Price Tracker—subscribe, share with your ag buddies, and catch you next time for more corn updates!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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116
Record Corn Stocks Meet Record Demand: Can Exports Keep the Rally Rolling?
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker. I'm your host Vanessa Clark, and I'm excited to walk you through what's been happening in the corn markets as we kick off another trading week.So let's jump right into the action. As of Monday, May corn futures closed at four dollars and fifty-four cents a bushel, up about one and three-quarter cents for the day. July corn settled at four sixty-five and a quarter, gaining two cents, while December corn finished at four eighty-three, up one and three-quarter cents. These modest gains came as traders responded to some really strong export demand numbers.Here's what's driving things right now. The USDA released export inspection data showing corn shipments of over two million metric tons for the week ending April second. That's significantly above what analysts were expecting and represents a twenty-four percent increase compared to the same week last year. Mexico, Japan, and Colombia are leading the charge as buyers. The marketing year total is now running thirty-six percent ahead of last year's pace, which is pretty remarkable.Energy markets are also playing a role in supporting grain prices. Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East have pushed crude oil higher, and that's providing an underlying support to the entire grain complex. When energy prices move up, it tends to lift agricultural commodities along with it.On the supply side, the USDA reported corn stocks at over nine billion bushels as of March first, which is the largest on record. That might sound bearish, but strong export demand has been eating into those supplies at a record clip. Traders are watching closely to see if that demand can sustain itself as we move through the spring and into the new crop season.Looking ahead, the USDA's big supply and demand report comes out Thursday, so keep your eyes on that. Analysts are expecting the report to show tighter corn stocks driven by this robust demand we've been seeing.That's what you need to know about corn right now. Thanks so much for tuning in to Daily Corn Price Tracker. Be sure to subscribe and tune in next time for more market insights. I'll catch you soon.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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May Corn Dips to Weekly Low as Export Woes and Oil Volatility Shake Up Midwest Markets
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on corn prices, market moves, and what it all means for growers and traders.First up, the current trading snapshot. May corn futures closed at $4.52 per bushel last week, down about 10 cents, with Thursday settling at a one-week low of $4.522. Cash bids from Green Plains are holding steady around $3.95 to $4.74 per bushel for number two yellow corn across key spots like Nebraska at $4.07 to $4.33, Illinois up to $4.70, and Iowa around $4.20. The national average basis firmed up 1 cent to -40K, with spots like Dayton, Ohio hitting $4.67 cash.News-wise, corn and soybeans eased on weak export demand, while wheat ticked higher amid broader grain pressures. Futures opened firmer this week but faded fast, influenced by volatile crude oil jumps to over $114 a barrel and geopolitical tensions like Iran uncertainties. Looking ahead, USDA prospective plantings show corn acres sliding 3% to 95.3 million, as soybeans gain ground to 84.7 million. Brazil's corn outlook stays strong with ample stocks projected at 11.59 million tons, but weather's the wildcard.For you listening, if you're marketing corn, watch those basis bids—they're key for locking in profits. Tip: Compare local cash bids daily and consider futures hedges if exports stay soft.That's your corn update—stay tuned to the markets, and thanks for joining me. Subscribe, share with fellow growers, and tune in next time for more Daily Corn Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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114
Corn Takes a Dip: Acreage Up, Prices Down, and Rain on the Radar for the Heartland
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on corn prices, market moves, and what it all means for farmers and traders.As of the close on Thursday, April 2, the key May 2026 corn futures settled at $4.52 and a quarter per bushel, down just 2 cents on the day but marking a weekly drop of about 10 cents. July corn futures closed at $4.63 and a quarter per bushel, off 1 and three-quarters cents, according to reports from Pro Farmer and DTN Progressive Farmer. Cash corn is hovering around $4.15 per bushel nationally, per CmdtyView data, while the DTN National Average Corn Index dipped 12 cents last week amid softer soybean meal prices too.Markets faced pressure from USDA's Prospective Plantings report, pegging 2026 corn acreage at 95.3 million acres—higher than expected but down from last year's 98.8 million. That's got traders eyeing ample supplies, even with solid exports hitting 78.5 million bushels last week and total sales up 29% year-over-year. Weather's in play too, with 1 to 2 inches of rain forecast for the Corn Belt, which could ease planting worries but add to the bearish vibe from technical selling and global uncertainties.Looking ahead, corn's trading a bit higher this morning, up 3 to 4 cents, buoyed by rebounding energy markets that tie into ethanol demand—weekly use hit 2.74 billion bushels. Volatility's here to stay with funds still net-long and Brazil's crop looming.Tip of the day: If you're holding corn, watch those July futures closely around $4.63—they could signal the next breakout. Stay nimble, track exports, and hedge smart.Thanks for tuning in to Daily Corn Price Tracker—subscribe, share with your farming friends, and we'll catch you next time for more corn market insights!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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113
Bumper Crops and Record Stocks: Why Corn Prices Dipped After USDA's April Surprise
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Corn podcast.Hey everyone, this is Vanessa Clark with your Daily Corn Price Tracker. Thanks so much for tuning in, and if you haven't already, make sure to subscribe so you never miss an update on what's happening in the corn markets.Let me break down what's been going on with corn prices this week. We saw some significant action on April first when the USDA released its Prospective Plantings report. The report showed that farmers are planning to plant 95.3 million acres of corn in 2026. Now, that's about 967,000 acres more than what analysts were expecting, and that higher acreage number actually put some downward pressure on prices.Speaking of prices, let's talk numbers. As of April first, Chicago corn futures for May delivery closed at 454 and a quarter cents per bushel, down about three and a half cents. July contracts settled at 465 cents per bushel, also down. The national average cash corn price was hovering around 4 dollars and 15 to 19 cents per bushel depending on your location.What's driving these price movements? Well, the USDA also reported that US corn stocks hit an all-time high of 9.024 billion bushels as of March first. That's 11 percent higher than a year ago and the largest supply for that date on record. With those massive stockpiles and the higher acreage projection, traders are concerned about potential oversupply in the market.The good news for corn is that futures did find some support. After testing key technical levels, late-session buying helped trim some of those losses. Corn futures tested support near 450 in May before buyers stepped in, which is a positive sign.Looking ahead, keep your eye on spring weather conditions. That's going to be crucial for determining final yields and how much corn actually gets produced. Input costs and planting decisions could also shift as we move through the season.That's what you need to know about corn prices right now. Thanks for listening to the Daily Corn Price Tracker, and be sure to tune in next time for the latest updates on corn trading.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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112
Kernels of Truth: Record Stocks and Planting Plans Shake Up Your Corn Market
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to the Daily Corn Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. Today we're diving into the hottest corn market news straight from the USDA reports that just dropped, including the latest on corn prices, planting plans, and stocks.Right now, corn futures are holding steady around four dollars and eighty-four cents for the December contract, after an initial pop from the reports. Total Farm Marketing notes May corn dipped a bit to about four dollars fifty-four cents early on, but things firmed up post-release as ProFarmer reports corn trading two to three cents higher midday. DTN confirms farmers plan to plant ninety-five point three million acres of corn this year, down three percent from last year but higher than the trade's average guess of ninety-four point five million. That's despite sky-high fertilizer costs from the Iran conflict buzz.On stocks, USDA says March first inventories hit a record nine point zero two four billion bushels, up eleven percent from last year, with on-farm stocks jumping twenty-one percent. Exports stay strong too, with one point seven nine million metric tons shipped last week, led by Mexico and Japan.What does this mean for you? Higher acres and massive stocks point to plenty of supply, keeping prices in check, but solid demand could spark rallies. If you're a farmer, watch those input costs and consider locking in sales now. Traders, eye resistance near four dollars ninety cents for May contracts per BlueLine Futures.That's your daily scoop, folks. Thanks for tuning in, subscribe so you never miss an update, and join me next time for more corn action. Talk soon!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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111
Planting Intentions and Fertilizer Fears: Why Tomorrow's USDA Report Could Change Everything
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker, I'm Vanessa Clark, and I'm so glad you're here with me today. We've got some really important market movement to talk about, so let's jump right in.As we start this week, corn futures are trading lower, but here's what's interesting. May corn closed at four dollars and fifty-five cents and three quarters a bushel, down about six and a quarter cents today. December corn is trading around four dollars and eighty-eight cents. Now, I know that might sound like a dip, but the story behind these numbers is what really matters.The reason corn is pulling back today has a lot to do with what's happening at the geopolitical level and what traders are expecting from the government. Earlier this week, there was uncertainty around Middle East tensions that spooked some traders. But more importantly, everyone in the market is holding their breath for tomorrow. The USDA is releasing their March Planting Intentions report and their Quarterly Grain Stocks report, and these reports could completely reshape where corn prices head next.Here's what to watch for in tomorrow's report. The USDA is expected to show that corn acres will drop to about ninety-four point four million acres, down from ninety-eight point eight million acres last year. That's a significant decrease, and it matters because less corn planted means potentially tighter supplies down the road. On the stocks side, traders are expecting to see about nine point one billion bushels of corn in storage as of March first, which would be roughly one billion bushels more than a year ago. That's a comfortable supply picture, but remember, these numbers were collected before the recent escalation in fertilizer costs.Here's the real story unfolding in farm country right now. Farmers are making tough decisions about what to plant this spring. Fertilizer prices have skyrocketed, especially nitrogen, which corn needs a lot of. So many farmers are shifting acres from corn to soybeans because soybeans require less expensive fertilizer. That means corn supply could tighten if production doesn't keep pace with demand, which could actually support prices later this year.The biofuel situation is also important. The EPA just announced that renewable fuel mandates will be strong in twenty twenty-six and twenty twenty-seven, which means steady demand for corn-based ethanol. That's supporting the market underneath.So while corn is down today, the fundamental picture is actually becoming more constructive heading into the planting season. Fewer acres, steady ethanol demand, and rising input costs creating production discipline, that all points toward potential upside if we can get through this week without any major shocks.Keep an eye on tomorrow's reports because that's when the real action happens. Thanks so much for tuning in to Daily Corn Price Tracker. Be sure to subscribe and join us again tomorrow when we break down what those USDA reports mean for your bottom line.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Kernels of Truth: May Corn Climbs as USDA Report Looms Large
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm Vanessa, your go-to guide for all things corn market, and today we're diving into the freshest updates on corn prices, trading action, and what it means for you.Right now, May corn futures are trading up three cents at four dollars and seventy cents a bushel, while December corn is two cents higher at four dollars ninety-six and a half cents. Total Farm Marketing reports this morning's strength comes from energy market boosts and traders positioning ahead of next Tuesday's big USDA reports on acreage and grain stocks. DTN confirms corn settled at four dollars sixty-seven on Thursday, with early Friday trade adding a couple cents on solid export sales to Mexico and expectations of lower plantings.Analysts like those at DTN and Farm Futures predict U.S. corn acres dropping to around ninety-four point five million for 2026, down four million from last year, thanks to high fertilizer and fuel costs from Middle East tensions. FAPRI forecasts average corn prices at four dollars thirty-one for the new crop, a modest rebound but still below decade averages. Plus, the EPA could announce higher biofuel mandates soon, which might crank up ethanol demand and support prices.For you farmers and traders listening, here's your takeaway: watch those USDA numbers Tuesday—they could swing prices big time. If acres confirm lower, it might ease supply pressure. Maybe lock in some sales if you're sitting on old crop, or hold off planting decisions until reports hit.Thanks for tuning in, pals—subscribe, share with your farm crew, and catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Kernels of Truth: E15 Boost and Export Buzz Lift Corn Markets Ahead of USDA Planting Report
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa Clark, and today were diving into the latest on corn prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.Right now, the front-month corn futures are sitting at 466 and a half cents per bushel on the CME Group, down just a tick from yesterday thanks to some early selling pressure. But do not let that fool you, May corn closed strong at about 4 dollars and 67 cents yesterday, riding high on that big EPA announcement for year-round E15 sales starting May first. That is a game-changer for ethanol demand, boosting corn use and giving prices a nice lift after solid export sales too.USDA data shows net corn export sales hit 1.22 million metric tons for the 2025-26 year, with heavy buying from Mexico and others. Total Farm Marketing reports demand is holding firm, and the US Grains and BioProducts Council just released their quality report, highlighting record-low broken corn levels and top-notch starch at 72 percent. Quality like that keeps our corn competitive worldwide.Markets are mixed today, with some weakness from global signals and South American harvest updates, but eyes are on the USDA Prospective Plantings report March 31st. Early guesses peg corn acres at 94 million, down a bit from last year. Plus, ethanol production is up week-over-week.Here is your takeaway, folks, if you are a farmer or trader: Lock in some sales now on these supportive export and biofuel vibes, but watch planting reports for acreage shifts. It could tighten supplies and push prices higher.Thanks for tuning in, best friends. Subscribe, share, and catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Corn Under Pressure: Brazil's Bumper Crop vs America's Ethanol Lifeline with Vanessa Clark
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on corn prices, global supply surprises, and some big ethanol news that could shake things up.Right now, corn futures are trading around four dollars and sixty-three cents per bushel for the front month, with May corn hovering near four dollars and fifty-nine cents after some early dips. Barchart shows midday gains pushing cash corn to about four dollars twenty-four cents nationally, but that massive global surplus from the USDA March WASDE report is keeping downward pressure on. They bumped ending stocks to nearly two hundred ninety-three million metric tons, thanks to bumper crops in Brazil and resilient Ukrainian output despite all the chaos.Heres the scoop: Brazils second-crop corn is planting strong at ninety-one percent, potentially hitting record highs, while Ukraine exported steady despite conflicts. That wall of corn means prices in the four dollars ten cents to four dollars fifty cents range, squeezing US farmer margins. But hold on, ethanol demand might save the day. Reuters reports the Trump administration could extend E15 sales this summer to fight high gas prices, and EPA biofuel mandates drop Friday, possibly boosting corn use.Global ripples too: China snapping up Brazilian beans is easing soy pressure, but fertilizer shortages from Middle East tensions have Australia cutting wheat acres and pivoting to low-input crops like canola.Actionable tip for you farmers and traders: Watch Brazil weather and US planting progress, already at forty-six percent in Louisiana. If corn dips below four dollars thirty, consider rotating to soy for better returns. Stay nimble, folks.Thanks for tuning in, besties. Subscribe, share with your farm crew, and catch you tomorrow for more corn updates. Take care.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Kernels of Truth: March Planting Progress and the Big USDA Report Ahead
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker. I'm Vanessa Clark, and today we're diving into what's happening in the corn market as we head into a crucial week for agriculture.Let's start with where corn is trading right now. As of this morning, May corn futures are up about two to three cents, bouncing back after Monday's losses. We're looking at prices hovering around four dollars and sixty-two cents per bushel, which is a nice recovery from yesterday's session. That's good news for farmers who've been watching the volatility.Here's what's driving the action today. First, crude oil bounced back after falling hard yesterday. When energy markets recover, it typically supports corn prices because ethanol production becomes more profitable. Traders are also keeping a close eye on export demand, which continues to be solid. According to recent trade data, U.S. corn export inspections are running strong, and Mexico remains our top destination for shipments.Now, the big picture for spring planting is shaping up nicely. Corn plantings are already underway in the Delta region, with Louisiana at forty-six percent complete and Texas at forty-two percent. The dry conditions across the southern plains are actually helping because farmers can get into the fields and plant earlier than usual. That's important because early planting typically leads to better yields.One thing to watch this week is the USDA Prospective Plantings report coming March thirty-first. Industry estimates are pointing toward somewhere between ninety-three and ninety-five million corn acres being planted this year, which would be down slightly from last year. Higher fertilizer costs are influencing those acreage decisions, so that could offer some price support down the road.South American corn supply is still a factor weighing on sentiment though. Brazil's second corn crop is nearly fully planted, which means global supply remains fairly comfortable. Unless weather turns problematic, we're likely to see corn consolidating in a range rather than making big directional moves in the near term.The broader geopolitical situation with Iran has also stabilized markets a bit after yesterday's sharp selloff, so traders are feeling less jittery about energy and inflation impacts on input costs.Thanks so much for tuning in to Daily Corn Price Tracker. Be sure to subscribe so you don't miss tomorrow's update. We'll keep tracking these prices and breaking down what they mean for farmers and the broader market. Until next time, stay informed and keep watching those futures.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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106
Kernels and Crude: How Oil Shocks Are Shaking Your Corn Bins This Spring
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on corn prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.Right now, May corn futures are trading around four dollars and seventy-two cents, up about six to seven cents early this morning according to AgMarket.Net and Total Farm Marketing reports. December corn is sitting near four dollars and ninety-seven cents, also gaining six cents or so. But hold on, things got choppy fast with some sources like GrainsPrices and Producer.com noting a pullback to around four dollars and sixty-five cents for May as crude oil tumbled on news of delayed strikes on Iran's energy sites from ADM Investor Services. That energy link is key, since higher oil props up corn through biofuels and costs.Funds are super bullish, holding over two hundred twenty thousand long corn contracts per AgMarket.Net, which could support prices on any dips. Exports are strong too, with USDA flash sales to Mexico and year-to-date inspections up thirty-eight percent. Looking ahead, AgMarket.Net estimates ninety-four point four million corn acres in the upcoming Prospective Plantings report on March thirty-first, slightly above USDA's last guess.Geopolitics is driving this, friends. Middle East tensions and fertilizer shortages from Strait of Hormuz issues are keeping inflation trades alive, but a strong US dollar over one hundred might cap gains. Competition from Argentina and Ukraine is heating up too.Here's your takeaway: If you're a farmer, watch those input costs and consider locking in sales if prices hold near these highs. Traders, eye crude oil swings and that March report for big moves. Stay nimble out there.Thanks for tuning in, pals. Subscribe, share with your farming buddies, and join me next time for more corn updates. Talk soon!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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105
Corn Faces the Seventy Cent Ceiling as Fertilizer Costs Reshape Spring Planting Plans
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on corn prices, futures action, and what it all means for you whether youre a farmer, trader, or just keeping tabs on this key commodity.First up, the current trading price. As of this morning, May corn futures are sitting at about four dollars sixty-seven cents per bushel, down a few cents from Thursdays close near four dollars seventy. DTN reports the national average corn index settled at four dollars sixty-nine seventy-five on March nineteenth, marking a ten-month high close with some solid technical buying pushing it up. Total Farm Marketing notes its facing resistance right around that four dollars seventy level early today.On the news front, exports are mixed. Weekly sales hit one point one eight million metric tons, down twenty-two percent from last week but still decent with big buyers like Mexico, Japan, and Spain stepping up. Thats according to CME Group and USDA data, though were below the one point five million tons needed weekly to hit annual targets. Demand signals are strong overall, with two thousand twenty-five twenty-six sales pacing thirty percent ahead of last year per AgroLatam.Looking ahead, fertilizer prices are spiking due to Middle East tensions and Chinas export curbs, sparking talk of acreage shifts. Surveys from Allendale and S and P Global peg two thousand twenty-six corn planting at ninety-three to ninety-five million acres, down from last year as farmers eye soybeans for better ratios. Dry warm weather in the Corn Belt could speed planting but watch soil moisture.Heres your takeaway: If youre planting, lock in fertilizer deals now and crunch those corn versus soybean numbers for max profit. Traders, keep an eye on exports and that four dollars seventy resistance for breakout potential.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, share with your ag buddies, and catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker. Stay smart out there.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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104
Kernels of Truth: May Futures Hit 10-Month High as Export Demand and Energy Prices Boost the Bushel
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to the Daily Corn Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. Today, were diving into the latest on corn prices, market moves, and what it all means for you whether youre a farmer, trader, or just keeping an eye on commodities.First up, the big news: May corn futures closed at four dollars and sixty-nine and three-quarters cents per bushel, up six and a half cents on the day. Thats according to GX94 Radio and ProFarmer reports from todays close, marking a ten-month high and showing some real bullish momentum from technical buying and a steady price uptrend. Cash corn values are also climbing, with the national average hitting four dollars and twenty-two cents, up nine cents, as DTN Progressive Farmer notes.Whats driving this? Stronger crude oil prices are giving corn a lift, tied to energy demand and biofuels, plus solid export sales to big buyers like Mexico with eleven million bushels, Japan at eight million, and Spain at six million, per ADM Investor Services. Traders are watching tomorrows export data, expecting zero point six to one point eight million metric tons, which could keep the good vibes going. On the flip side, forecasts show US corn planting acres dipping to ninety-five point two million for this year, down from last year due to sky-high fertilizer costs from Middle East tensions, as S&P Global reports. That could tighten supply later.Actionable tip for you: If youre holding corn, consider locking in some sales now at these higher levels before any weather risks or acreage reports shift things. Keep an eye on energy prices too, since theyre fueling this rally.Thats your daily update, folks. Thanks for tuning in, like a best friend sharing the scoop. Hit subscribe, share with your network, and well catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker. Stay smart out there!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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103
Kernels of Truth: How Iran Tensions and Fertilizer Squeeze Are Shaking Up Your Corn Markets
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the hottest corn market news, including the very latest trading prices and whats shaking things up right now.First off, the current trading snapshot as of this morning. May 2026 corn futures are sitting at around four dollars and fifty-five cents per bushel, up a bit from yesterday with some early gains pushing it toward four dollars and sixty-four cents for July contracts. December futures have been flirting with five dollars lately, hitting new highs amid all the action. These numbers come straight from Chicago Mercantile Exchange updates and MarketMinute reports on todays volatility.The big story driving this is the ongoing Middle East tensions, especially the Iran conflict thats spiked energy and fertilizer costs. Farmdoc Daily notes corn prices climbed from four dollars sixty-nine cents on February twenty-seventh to four dollars ninety cents by mid-March, though we saw a dip recently. Higher diesel at nearly four dollars a gallon and soaring urea prices are squeezing farmers margins, with some projecting losses up to two hundred fifty dollars per acre if costs keep rising. Plus, the March WASDE from USDA kept US corn stocks steady but bumped world ending stocks higher, while South American production shifts add uncertainty.Geopolitical shocks like Strait of Hormuz disruptions and Black Sea issues are linking energy directly to grain prices, boosting demand for corn-based biofuels. Surveys from Allendale signal fewer corn acres this year, maybe shifting to soybeans to cut nitrogen needs, which could push prices even higher come planting time.Her takeaway for you: If youre a farmer, lock in some sales now or scout fertilizer deals quick. Traders, watch USDA planting reports and any de-escalation news closely. Volatility means opportunity, but play it smart.Thanks for tuning in, pals. Subscribe, share with your farm crew, and catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker. Stay savvy out there!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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102
Corn Holds Steady at $4.54 as Gulf Bids Dip and Fertilizer Costs Squeeze Spring Planting Plans
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on corn prices, export bids, and what it all means for you.First up, the current trading price. May corn futures closed at four dollars and 54 cents per bushel yesterday, holding steady after a sharp 13 cent drop on Monday. According to a USDA AMS MyMarketNews report, export bids for US number two yellow corn at Gulf Coast ports are ranging from five dollars 27 to five dollars 28 per bushel for current delivery. That's a slight dip from recent highs, but still showing solid demand.Markets got slammed Monday thanks to soybean futures hitting limit down after President Trump hinted at delaying his meeting with Chinas President Xi over Strait of Hormuz tensions. Corn followed suit, but its rebounding a bit this morning with May futures up around one cent near four dollars 55 and a quarter. Export inspections are strong too, with 65 million bushels shipped last week, up nine percent from the prior week and 39 percent year to date.On the horizon, rising nitrogen fertilizer prices from the Iran conflict and Strait closures are squeezing costs, potentially leading to fewer corn acres and a shift to soybeans. That could prop up prices above four dollars 50 per bushel. Brazil faces higher freight costs during peak exports, which might boost US demand.Actionable tip: If youre a farmer, lock in some sales now at these levels or watch fertilizer deals closely. Cash corn is trading below production costs in spots, so revisit your nitrogen plans and acreage mix to protect your margins.Thats your daily corn update, folks. Thanks for tuning in like the great friend you are. Hit subscribe, share with your network, and well catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker. Stay smart out there.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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101
Corn Takes a Hit: How Hormuz Tensions and Fertilizer Costs Are Reshaping Your Spring Planting Strategy
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey everybody, it's Vanessa Clark, and welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker. I'm so glad you're here with me today as we dive into what's been happening in the corn market this Monday, March 16th.Let me give you the headline right off the bat. May corn futures closed today at four dollars and fifty-four cents per bushel, down thirteen and a quarter cents. That's a pretty significant drop, and I want to walk you through what's driving this volatility because it really affects farmers, consumers, and anyone paying attention to food prices.Here's what's going on. We've seen some major spillover selling pressure from the soybean market, which had a limit-down day. That's when prices fall so sharply that trading actually halts. The trigger for this soybean selloff was geopolitical tension between the United States and China. President Trump made a weekend threat to postpone a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping unless China sends warships to help secure the Strait of Hormuz. That single statement rippled through commodity markets globally.Now, you might be wondering why geopolitical news impacts corn specifically. The answer is energy. Crude oil prices and corn prices move together because energy costs affect everything from fertilizer production to transportation to drying grain. When there's conflict in the Middle East, oil prices spike, and that creates a complex cascade through agricultural markets.Here's something really important to understand. About fifty percent of global grain production depends on artificial fertilizers, and those require fossil fuels to produce. With the ongoing war in Iran affecting oil supplies, fertilizer costs are climbing. Corn is actually a bigger consumer of nitrogen fertilizer than soybeans are, so higher fertilizer costs put pressure on corn planting decisions.Looking at the bigger picture, December corn futures are sitting at four dollars and ninety-one cents, which shows the market expects some support for prices going forward. According to recent market analysis, the current corn market is very volatile and being driven by both energy costs and speculative fund trading activity.If you're a farmer thinking about planting decisions this spring, keep a close eye on fertilizer prices because those will largely determine your profitability. If you're a consumer, remember that corn prices affect everything from the gas in your car to the food on your dinner table, because corn goes into ethanol, livestock feed, and hundreds of products you use every day.Thanks so much for tuning in to Daily Corn Price Tracker. I'm Vanessa Clark, and please make sure you subscribe and tune in next time for more insights into what's moving commodity markets and how it impacts your wallet.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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100
Kernels of Truth: May Corn Climbs as Iran Tensions Fertilize Higher Prices
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on corn prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.First up, the big news: May corn futures closed at four dollars and sixty-two and a half cents, up two and a quarter cents on the day, according to Pro Farmer and Brownfield Ag News. That's near the daily low but still showing some solid technical buying as prices trend higher on the charts. Cash corn prices are also climbing, with the national average hitting around four dollars and twenty cents three-quarters per bushel per Barchart. Firmer oil prices are pushing grains like corn upward, and we're seeing that rally hold into Thursday morning.Why the uptick? Geopolitical tensions, especially the Iran situation disrupting the Strait of Hormuz, are spiking fertilizer costs, reports CNBC Indonesia. Urea is up twenty-seven percent, which could squeeze planting budgets and tighten supplies down the road. Plus, USDA's latest WASDE keeps the twenty twenty-five twenty-six corn outlook steady, with global ending stocks up a bit to two hundred ninety-two point eight million metric tons, but export sales are strong at sixty million bushels last week, per ADM Investor Services, putting year-to-date commitments way ahead.Actionable takeaway: If you're a farmer, watch those input costs and consider locking in sales now with exports humming, especially to Japan and Mexico. For everyday folks, higher corn could nudge food prices like meat and ethanol up, so stock up on staples when you spot deals.That's your daily corn update, packed with the freshest info. Thanks for tuning in, friends. Hit subscribe, share with your crew, and join me next time for more on corn prices and trends. Talk soon!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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99
Kernels of Truth: May Corn Rallies on Strong Ethanol Demand and Export Pace
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im Vanessa, your go-to guide for all things corn, and today were diving into the freshest corn market news, current trading prices, and what it means for you.First up, the big headline: May corn futures closed at four dollars and sixty cents and one quarter per bushel, up eight cents on the day according to Brownfield Ag News and GX94 Radio closing reports. That is a solid rally after a slight dip yesterday, with early Wednesday trading pushing even higher by six to eight cents amid strong ethanol demand signals. The EIA reported ethanol production up to one point one two six million barrels per day, with stocks drawing down, which is boosting corn ethanol margins and giving prices that extra lift.USDA kept US corn ending stocks steady at two point one two seven billion bushels in the March WASDE report, neutral overall but with global stocks ticking higher by three point seven six million metric tons, adding a mildly bearish tint. Export inspections hit one point five one eight million tons last week, led by Mexico, keeping demand resilient. Pro Farmer notes Brazilian corn production risks from late planting, which could support prices if yields slip.What does this mean for you? If you are a farmer holding corn, this uptick might be a good spot to lock in sales, especially with export pace eyeing record three point three billion bushels for the year. Watch tomorrows export sales data, expected thirty-five to eighty-five million bushels, for more clues.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Hit subscribe, share with your ag buddies, and join me next time for your Daily Corn Price Tracker update. Take care!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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98
Fertilizer Shock and Hormuz Heat: Why Your Corn Acreage Math Just Changed
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on corn prices, whats driving the market, and some smart tips to help you stay ahead.Right now, May corn futures are sitting at about four dollars and sixty-nine cents a bushel, up eight and three-quarters cents this morning according to Total Farm Marketing. That comes after a volatile week where prices hit a ten-month high overnight but pulled back a bit, with ProFarmer noting May closed Friday at four dollars fifty-three and three-quarters cents after some profit-taking. Cash corn is averaging around four dollars twelve cents nationally per Barchart, down a touch midday.Whats fueling this? Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, especially around Iran and the Strait of Hormuz, have oil surging past one hundred dollars a barrel. That spikes fertilizer costs, which jumped from five hundred sixteen to six hundred eighty-three dollars per metric ton at New Orleans per Farm Policy News. Corn is fertilizer-heavy, so analysts like Dan Basse from AgResource are cutting US corn planting estimates by a million to a million and a half acres, shifting to soybeans. Brazils first corn crop is forty-two percent harvested per AgRural, lagging last year, while Ukraine eyes higher production at thirty-one point eight million metric tons says APK Inform.Export demand stays strong, with Mexico, Japan, and Colombia leading buys, and spec funds now net long fifty-three thousand contracts per ADMIS.Takeaway: If youre planting, lock in some fertilizer now and watch soybean shifts for rotation ideas. It could mean higher prices ahead if tensions drag on.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, share with your farm crew, and catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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97
Corn Pops and Oil Drops: Your March 6th Market Wake-Up Call with Vanessa
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on corn prices, market moves, and what it all means for you whether you're farming, trading, or just keeping an eye on your grocery bill.First up, the current trading price. According to the Feeder Flash cattle market report from DVAuction and National Beef Wire on March 6th, May corn futures closed up nine and three quarter cents at four hundred fifty three and a half cents per bushel on Thursday. Thats a nice little bounce after some recent ups and downs, showing buyers stepping in amid broader grain strength. May soybeans matched that gain at eleven seventy nine and a quarter, while wheat climbed too, hinting at solid demand across the board.Now, why the uptick? Bigger picture news is shaking things up. CBS News reports surging oil prices from the Iran conflict have the Dow plunging nearly eight hundred points, with West Texas Intermediate crude hitting over eighty dollars. That spells higher fuel and transport costs, which could squeeze corn logistics from farm to market. Bloomberg Podcasts notes chaos in the Strait of Hormuz is delaying not just oil but fertilizers and other key inputs too, potentially tightening corn production down the road. Farm Journal mentions investigations into fertilizer companies, adding more uncertainty to planting season costs.For you listening, heres your actionable takeaway: if youre holding corn, this futures pop might be a signal to lock in sales soon before volatility from oil spikes hits harder. Farmers, watch diesel prices at the pump theyre already jumping and could eat into margins. Traders, keep an eye on exports; high energy costs might crimp demand but domestic feed needs stay strong with cattle herds steady.Thats your daily update, folks. Thanks for tuning in like youre my best friend sharing coffee. Hit subscribe, share with your crew, and well catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Stay smart out there!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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96
Corn Climbs on Crude: May Futures Pop as Energy Lifts Ethanol and Export Sales Heat Up ---
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. Today were diving into the freshest corn market news, including those key trading prices you all love to hear about.Right now, May corn futures are pushing higher, sitting at about four dollars and forty-six cents per bushel, up two and a half cents this morning. Total Farm Marketing reports that momentum is building with support spilling over from stronger energy markets, where crude oil is climbing near seventy-seven dollars a barrel amid Middle East tensions. Yesterday, prices dipped a bit to around four dollars and forty-four cents, but were rebounding strong early today according to updates from DTN Progressive Farmer and market analysts on YouTube.Ethanol production is holding steady too, using over one hundred nine million bushels of corn last week, right on pace with USDA targets despite a slight drop in output. And get this, USDA just announced a flash sale of five million bushels to unknown buyers, showing solid export demand. The War Room podcast highlighted how US corn stays competitive globally.On the planting front, talks about fertilizer costs from the Iran situation have folks wondering about acreage cuts, but farmers are reporting most nitrogen is already prepaid, so plans look steady around ninety-six million acres. Thats good news if youre holding corn or planning your fields.Her practical tip for today: With prices firming up, keep an eye on energy news, as it directly lifts corn through ethanol demand. If youre a producer, lock in some sales now while exports heat up, or if youre buying feed, shop around for basis deals to stretch your dollar.Thanks for tuning in, buddies, youre the best. Hit subscribe so you never miss a daily update, and well catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker. Stay smart out there.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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95
Kernels of Truth: Corn Dips to 432 as Brazil Harvests Keep a Lid on Rally
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Hey everyone, its your host Vanessa here, chatting with you like were grabbing coffee together. Today were diving into the latest on corn prices, whats driving the market, and some smart tips to help you stay ahead whether youre a farmer, trader, or just keeping an eye on your grocery bill.First up, the current trading price. As of this evenings close on the Chicago Board of Trade, corn futures for May delivery settled at 432 cents per bushel, down about 5 cents from yesterday. That puts us in a bit of a dip after last weeks rally. Trading volume was steady at around 300,000 contracts, with open interest holding firm.Whats behind the move? Dry weather in parts of the US Corn Belt is raising concerns about planting delays for the new crop, but solid South American harvests, especially from Brazil, are keeping supplies ample and capping any big upside. According to the USDA, global corn ending stocks are projected at 364 million metric tons for the 2025-26 marketing year, up slightly from earlier estimates. Export demand remains strong, though, with China buying aggressively for feed.Over the past week, prices have fluctuated between 428 and 440 cents, influenced by shifting weather forecasts and biofuel demand. Ethanol production is humming along, using about 40 percent of US corn output.Heres your actionable takeaway: If youre holding corn positions, consider tightening stops below 425 cents to protect against further downside. For farmers, lock in some sales now at these levels using futures or options its a hedge against volatility. And if youre in the livestock game, scout local deals as feed costs might ease short-term.Thats your daily update on corn market news and prices. Thanks for tuning in, friends. Hit subscribe so you never miss an episode, and well catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Take care!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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94
Corn Climbs on Export Strength as Brazil Planting Lags and Insurance Deadlines Loom
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on corn prices, futures, and what it all means for you.First up, the current trading prices as of this evenings close. According to Midwestern Agriculture and Agris at Thamesville, 2026 crop corn is sitting at five dollars and ninety-six cents per bushel, up one cent from yesterday. The 2027 crop is at five dollars and eighty-four cents per bushel, up a half cent. On the Chicago Board of Trade, May corn futures closed up a half cent at four dollars and forty-six cents, while July was up one cent at four dollars and fifty-five cents. Hensall District Co-op matches those local bids pretty closely too.Geopolitical tensions, especially around the US and Iran conflict, are injecting some uncertainty into markets, pushing crude oil higher and giving corn a little lift today after a mixed session yesterday. Export inspections are strong, with US corn shipments up forty-five percent from last year, led by big buys from Mexico. But keep an eye on South America, where Brazils safrinha corn planting is lagging, and Argentinas crop needs more rain.For you farmers and traders, heres your actionable takeaway: with spring crop insurance prices finalized around four dollars sixty-two cents per bushel for 2026, nows a smart time to review your risk management. Lock in some protection if prices dip below your break-evens, which are hovering near five bucks. And if youre holding old crop, watch those resistance levels around four dollars fifty cents on nearby futures, as old supplies are still flowing.Thats your daily corn update, packed with the info you need to make moves. Thanks for tuning in, friends. Hit subscribe, share with your crew, and well catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker. Stay smart out there.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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93
Corn Rally Hits Six-Week High as Japan Flash Sale Boosts March Futures to $4.38
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im Vanessa, your go-to guide for all things corn market, and today were diving into the freshest corn news, trading prices, and what it means for you.First up, the current trading price. March corn futures closed at four dollars and thirty-eight and three-quarters cents per bushel, up five and a half cents on the day according to Brownfield Ag News closing report. May futures rallied too, hitting around four dollars forty-four cents earlier in the session per Trading Economics, marking a six-week high. Thats some nice momentum after Thursdays late buying strength lifted prices from session lows, as Total Farm Marketing noted with May at four forty-three and a half and July at four fifty-one and a quarter.On the news front, exports are a mixed bag. Weekly sales for the week ending February nineteenth came in at six hundred eighty-five thousand eight hundred metric tons, below expectations and down fifty-three percent from last week, with Mexico and Japan leading the buys. But USDA announced a flash sale to Japan of one hundred seventy-eight thousand metric tons, split across marketing years. The February WASDE report from USDA cut ending stocks by one hundred million bushels to two point one two seven billion, still a seven-year high despite record exports forecasted at three point three billion bushels. Global demand is strong, but that massive domestic surplus keeps prices in check around four dollars ten cents season average.Heres your actionable takeaway, folks. With crop insurance projected at four dollars sixty-two for next years corn per DTN, consider small risk-off sales if youre holding new crop, or watch for spring highs to lock in gains. Stay nimble on planting shifts too, as soybean acres may rise.Thanks for tuning in, besties. Subscribe, share with your farm crew, and catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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92
Biofuel Buzz Lifts Corn: Export Records and March Gains Worth Watching
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on corn prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.First up, the big news: March corn futures closed at four dollars and thirty-three and a quarter cents per bushel, up two and three-quarters cents, according to GX94 Radio and Brownfield Ag News closing reports. Thats a nice little bump, driven by optimism around biofuel demand. The EPA sent its proposal for higher blending mandates to the White House, and its expected to finalize by late March, boosting corn use in ethanol. Total Farm Marketing notes May corn hit four dollars thirty and a half cents, with December futures reaching new yearly highs at four dollars sixty-seven cents.Exports are a bright spot too. US corn shipments are smashing records, up to three point three billion bushels for the marketing year per the USDA WASDE report, with sales to Mexico, Japan, and others keeping demand strong despite huge supplies from the US and Brazil. Private sales like one hundred seventy-eight thousand metric tons to Japan this week add to the momentum.Cash corn averaged about three dollars ninety-eight cents nationally, per CmdtyView data. New crop prices held steady around five dollars eighty-seven to five dollars ninety-two per bushel from spots like Great Lakes Grain.Heres your takeaway: If youre a farmer with old crop, sell steadily now while demand holds. For new crop planting, watch those insurance prices around four dollars sixty cents and biofuels for upside. Strong exports could lift values, but big South American crops loom.Thanks for tuning in, buddies. Subscribe, share with your farm crew, and catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker. Stay savvy out there.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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91
Four Days Up: Corn Rides Export Wave While Brazil Planting Lags Behind
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on corn prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.March corn futures closed at four dollars and thirty and a half cents, up two and three quarters cents on the day, according to Brownfield Ag News closing report. Thats four sessions in a row of gains, driven by strong export demand. US exporters shipped over two million metric tons last week, trending forty six percent above last year per Total Farm Marketing. Plus, Taiwan just bought sixty five thousand metric tons with the US as the top origin, as noted in Nasdaq market updates.Demand stays hot with flash sales like Columbias one hundred twenty five thousand metric tons announced by USDA. Ethanol production dipped slightly to one point one one three million barrels per day, but stocks are building, says the Energy Information Administration. On the global side, Brazils second crop planting lags at fifty percent done versus sixty four percent last year, per AgRural, which could tighten supplies later.Cash corn averaged around three dollars ninety six and a half cents nationally via CmdtyView, and December futures hit four dollars sixty average this month for crop insurance basing, down a dime from last year.Her friends, if youre a producer, watch first notice day this Friday for March contracts, it could spark some selling. For buyers or feeders, these export wins mean steady demand, so lock in basis now if prices fit your budget. Stay nimble with tomorrows USDA export sales report expecting point nine to one point eight million metric tons of old crop.Thanks for tuning in, youre the best. Subscribe, share with your farm crew, and catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker. Take care.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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90
Corn Holds Strong: Export Surge Powers Prices as Brazil's Giant Crop Looms Large
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on corn prices, export demand, and what it all means for you whether youre a farmer, trader, or just keeping tabs on the markets.First up, the current trading price. According to GX94 Radios February 24 closing commodity prices, March corn futures settled at 4 dollars and 27 and three quarters cents per bushel, up a quarter cent on the day. Thats holding steady amid some broader commodity softness, with grainsprices.com noting its currently up another half cent in early Tuesday trading. Solid export momentum is keeping things anchored, folks.Now, the big news boosting corn: exports are on fire. The U.S. Department of Agriculture confirmed in its February supply and demand estimates that demand keeps improving, with the export forecast bumped up 100 million bushels to a record 3.3 billion. AgriNews reports U.S. ending stocks dipped to 2.127 billion bushels, the lower end of trade guesses. Weekly export inspections hit 78.9 million bushels, up 33 percent from last week and way ahead of last year, per Agrolatam. Private sales to Colombia added another 4.9 million bushels. The Western Producer calls it the strongest weekly number since November, with total shipments 46 percent ahead of pace.But supplies are still plentiful globally, and Brazils massive safrinha corn crop looms large, expected at 131 million metric tons. That could slow U.S. demand come summer.Heres your actionable takeaway: If youre planting this spring, watch that soy-to-corn price ratio its hovering high, hinting at more soybean acres which could tighten corn supplies and lift prices. Barchart suggests prices might not be too low with stocks declining into 2026. Check your crop insurance options like Enhanced Coverage now, ahead of USDAs Prospective Plantings report end of March.Thanks for tuning in, buddies. Subscribe, share with a friend, and catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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89
Kernel Truth: Corn Holds Steady While Export Demand Keeps Bulls in the Game
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on corn prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.Right now, March corn futures are sitting steady at four dollars and twenty-seven and a half cents per bushel, according to closing reports from Brownfield Ag News and GX94 Radio. That's basically unchanged from last close, with a slight uptick of a quarter cent during the session as noted by Barchart. Trading Economics shows corn at four twenty-seven point nine eight US dollars per bushel, up zero point one one percent today, though it's dipped a tiny bit over the past month and is down about eleven point three percent from last year.What's driving this? Strong US export inspections hit nearly eighty million bushels last week, the second biggest total this year, per Barchart, with a fresh private sale to Colombia boosting demand. But plenty of old crop corn is still unpriced, keeping a lid on rallies, as Mark's Market Talk points out. Globally, the International Grains Council bumped corn production estimates a smidge to one point three one billion tonnes, with ample supplies from Brazil's harvest pressuring prices. Funds are net short but covering some positions.Looking ahead, expect corn around four twenty-five by quarter's end per Trading Economics forecasts, with more focus on US planting cuts and weather risks. Tariff talks are swirling too, especially after Supreme Court news hitting soybeans hard, but corn held firm.Takeaway for you growers and buyers: If you've got price-later contracts, watch first notice day on February twenty-seventh—might be time to lock in futures. Folks in the feed or ethanol game, these steady exports mean solid demand, so track basis for your local cash bids hovering near three ninety-seven nationally.Thanks for tuning in, friends—grab that subscribe button, share with your farm crew, and join me next time for more corn updates. Talk soon!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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88
Corn Climbs on Export Strength as USDA Sees Tighter Supplies Ahead
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im Vanessa, your go-to guide for all things corn market, and today were diving into the freshest corn price updates, trading action, and key news thats shaking things up.First off, the headline number youre here for: March corn futures closed today at four dollars and twenty-seven and a half cents per bushel, up one and three-quarters cents. Thats according to GX94 Radio and Brownfield Ag News closing reports. We saw a nice little push higher through the day, with gains of one to three and three-quarters cents early on, thanks to spillover support from wheat markets flying high. Barchart noted corn bulls getting some momentum to start Friday, even as March options expired today.On the news front, USDA just dropped their Grains and Oilseeds Outlook on February nineteenth, predicting US corn production drops to fifteen point eight billion bushels for twenty twenty-six twenty-seven, down about seven percent from prior years. Thats sparking chatter about tighter supplies ahead. Export sales are holding strong too, with old crop corn at one point four seven million metric tons for the week ending February twelfth, right in the sweet spot of estimates per Barchart and Morningstars Dow Jones report. A South Korean buyer snapped up one hundred thirty-two thousand metric tons overnight, keeping demand perky.Cash corn averaged three dollars ninety-four and a quarter cents nationally, up a bit, while crop insurance price discovery for December sits at four dollars sixty, a dime off last year.Heres your actionable takeaway, pals: If youre planting or hedging, watch that USDA production cut closely, it could nudge prices up modestly long-term. Pair it with strong exports, and it might be time to lock in some sales if youre sitting on old crop.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, share with your farm crew, and well catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker. Stay savvy out there.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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87
Corn Holds Steady as Farmers Double Down on Acres Despite Bin-Busting Surplus
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, chatting with you like were kicking back over coffee about the latest in corn markets.Todays big news on corn prices: the March corn futures closed at four dollars and twenty-five and three-quarters cents per bushel, down one and a quarter cents from yesterday, according to GX94 Radio and Brownfield Ag News closing reports. That national average cash corn price sits around three dollars ninety-four and a half cents, up just a half cent as TradingView notes. Corn futures slipped a bit today amid ample supplies, but demand from exports and ethanol is holding things steady.Heres the scoop on bigger trends: US farmers are eyeing only a slight cut in corn plantings for two thousand twenty-six, down about four percent to ninety-four point nine million acres per Reuters analysts ahead of the USDA Outlook Forum. Thats still huge, the second most in thirteen years, after last years record harvest stuffed bins and pressured prices. The Pig Site reports farmers see corn as their best bet to break even with strong usage, unlike riskier soybeans hit by Brazil competition and US-China trade jitters. USDA projects two thousand twenty-six twenty-seven corn production at fifteen point seven five five billion bushels, with yields at one hundred eighty-three bushels per acre, and ending stocks still hefty at one point eight three seven billion.Actionable tip for you growers or traders: Watch export sales data dropping Friday, expected between zero point six and two point two million metric tons. With prices near break-even, lock in some sales now if youre holding old crop, or scout rotations favoring corn over beans for better margins. Stay nimble, chat with your advisor, and keep an eye on South American weather.Thanks for tuning in, pals. Subscribe, share with your farm crew, and catch you next time on Daily Corn Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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86
Kernels of Truth: Why Your Corn Check Depends on Brazilian Rain and Slow Boats to China
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Corn Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hello and welcome to Daily Corn Price Tracker. I'm Vanessa Clark, and today we're breaking down what's happening in the corn market right now, because if you're farming or investing, you need to know what's going on with your crop.Let's start with today's numbers. As of this afternoon, March corn futures closed at four dollars and twenty seven cents per bushel, up three quarters of a cent. If you're looking at May contracts, we're sitting at four dollars and thirty six and three quarters cents. Now, I know those numbers might seem small, but in the grain market, every penny counts for your bottom line.Here's what's really driving the market right now. According to recent USDA data, we have ample corn supplies in the United States. The latest projections show ending stocks at two point one billion bushels, which is actually lower than before, but still provides a comfortable supply buffer relative to how much we're actually consuming. The USDA also raised the export forecast to a record three point three billion bushels, which sounds great for demand, but here's the catch.The disconnect we're seeing is between sales and actual shipments. We're selling corn at a strong pace, but the physical corn isn't moving out of the country fast enough to absorb all that supply. That lag is keeping a lid on prices. Most forecasters are projecting corn will settle around four dollars and thirty three cents per bushel for the marketing year, and the December contract is hovering near four dollars and sixty cents.What should you be watching? Brazil's second crop, or what they call the safrinha harvest. Brazil is producing a record one hundred thirty eight point eight seven million tons of corn, and how that harvest progresses over the next few weeks could be a game changer for global prices. Any weather problems there could tighten supplies worldwide and lift prices here.For farmers getting ready for spring planting, the message is mixed. Corn prices are near break even levels, which means margins are tight but not impossible. The market is essentially saying cut back slightly on acres, but don't abandon corn entirely. We need it, just not as much as last year.The bottom line is this. Corn is trading in a narrow range because supply is comfortable but demand is improving. Without a major catalyst like Brazilian weather problems or a sudden surge in export shipments, expect corn prices to stay rangebound in that four twenty five to four thirty cent range.Thanks so much for listening to Daily Corn Price Tracker. Be sure to subscribe and tune in tomorrow when we break down what's moving the market next. This is Vanessa Clark signing off.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Check out Vanessa Clark's Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/vane... This is your Corn Commidity Tracker podcast. For more info go to https://www.instagram.com/vane...https://www.quietplease.ai Or check out these deals https://amzn.to/3FkjUmwThis show includes AI-generated content.
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